IPT Potato Tour | Krasnoyarsk: breeding, seed potatoes, and crop protection

Potato Tour | Krasnoyarsk: breeding, seed potatoes, and crop protection

At the Krasnoyarsk Agrarian University, a Center for Breeding and Seed Production runs parallel programs in potatoes and soybean: testing rotations, multiplying high seed classes, advancing lines toward the State Register, and—together with Avgust—trialing protection schemes on demo plots. Core takeaways: soy in rotation with potatoes works, seed class strongly drives yield and storability, and there are no “perfect” cultivars—breeding balances earliness, productivity, and resistance.

Who and where

  • Krasnoyarsk Agrarian University, Center for Breeding & Seed Production.
  • Focus: potatoes and soy (started with soy; potatoes added later).
  • Pipeline: from breeding (tough “low-input” background) → seed production (high-input agronomy + protection) → handoff to growers.

Crop rotation: why soy ↔ potato

  • Soy after potatoes is a strong predecessor: cleaner field, residual fertility still “works,” and herbicide compatibility reduces carryover risks.
  • Soy adds symbiotic nitrogen, substantial residues, and a positive organic matter balance (confirmed by soil studies).

Market demand and breeding trade-offs

  • Local consumers and retail want large, yellow-fleshed, tasty potatoes with solid disease resistance.
  • Gala led for years but often skews too many small tubers (many-tuber trait), so growers are moving on.
  • A typical “impossible brief”: very early + very high yielding + broadly resistant. Reality demands balance.
  • Myth: “more starch = better taste.” In practice, starch and eating quality aren’t the same thing.

New varieties and the “star series”

  • Acrux — listed in the State Register (2025) for Zones 10–11 (Western & Eastern Siberia).
  • Mira (in trials): targeted at large table potatoes; demo results reached ~40 t/ha.
  • A promising purple-fleshed line is in the pipeline; naming will keep the star-themed convention.

Seed production: class matters

  • Plots include super-super-elite plantings (some material shifted to super-elite to ease market adoption).
  • Seed fields target grade/size profile, not maximum tonnage; typical range ~20–25 t/ha for seed production.
  • Demonstrations show clear gaps between SSE/SE vs. reproduction classes—measurable yield lifts (e.g., +6 t/ha in trials).
  • Reminder: small table fraction ≠ seed. “Refresh every 5–6 years” leads to planting-stock degradation.

Soils and adaptation

  • Leached chernozems with high fertility—but heavy loams aren’t ideal for long-oval types (deeper eyes, poorer shape).
  • Regional pattern: early-summer drought followed by cool, wet late season. Breeding selects for adaptation; final stages test max yield potential under high agronomy.

Crop protection: can you save on CP with elite seed?

  • Planting elite/high classes does not automatically cut crop-protection needs; resistance is cultivar-specific.
  • Some reproduction fields may safely skip a pass (e.g., one fewer spray in certain contexts), but on high classes the recommendation is to run full programs.
  • With Avgust, the center runs demo trials (herbicides/fungicides/insecticides) and designs anti-resistance schemes.

Education and events

  • Joint Spring Fieldwork 2025 recommendations published with Avgust; ongoing grower training.
  • July 31 – August 1free, two-day scientific & practical seminar:
    • Day 1 — theory (nutrition, protection, tillage, breeding & seed potatoes).
    • Day 2 — field visits.
    • Participants receive a professional development certificate.
    • Registration via district agricultural departments.
    • Contact: Pavel Stolyar, Head of Avgust’s Krasnoyarsk branch.

Key facts (at a glance)

  • Rotation potato ↔ soy: boosts organic matter and N.
  • Market wants large, yellow tubers; Gala sliding due to size profile.
  • Acrux in State Register (2025), Zones 10–11.
  • Seed fields: 20–25 t/ha target; table trials up to ~40 t/ha.
  • Higher seed class = higher yield & storability; small table potatoes are not seed.
  • CP: skimping on high classes is risky; tailor programs to cultivar and agronomy.

Quotes

  • “Soy after potatoes is a strong predecessor: cleaner field, better fertility, herbicide compatibility.”
  • “There are no perfect cultivars—we balance earliness, yield, and resistance.”
  • “The gap between SSE/SE and reproductions still surprises us each year.”
  • “Elite seed isn’t a reason to cut protection: savings, if any, appear on some reproduction fields.”

Bottom line

The Krasnoyarsk team shows how science → seed → field should flow: disciplined rotation, rigorous seed class management, honest protection schemes, and breeding for real-world demand (large grade, resilience, adaptation). The “star series,” from Acrux onward, has a real shot at becoming a regional standard.


Preview / Teaser (for social)

Krasnoyarsk: breeding, seed potatoes, and crop protection. Soy in rotation, “star-series” cultivars (Acrux, Mira), why elite seed doesn’t mean cheaper CP—and a free seminar July 31–Aug 1. Details in our Potato Tour report.
Watch the new video and support us: subscribe, comment, and share if you found it useful!
VK: https://vk.com/potatoholic · YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@POTATOESNEWS · TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@potatoes.news

Viktor Kovalev CEO
POTATOES NEWS Viktor Kovalev is the founder of Potatoes.News and the creator of the International Potato Tour (IPT) — a global multimedia project that connects potato farmers, processors, researchers, and agribusiness companies across more than 20 countries. Viktor writes about potato production, processing technologies, storage, seed breeding, export markets, innovations, and sustainable agriculture. His work combines journalism, field research, and video storytelling, giving readers and viewers a unique perspective on the global potato industry. Areas of expertise: Global potato market trends Seed potato production and certification Potato processing (chips, flakes, fries, starch) Smart farming and agri-technologies Storage, logistics, and export Interviews and field reports from leading producers

Exit mobile version